Maybe from the word tore or like a rip.
Because tornados rip and tear things
Kennedy age 11
The word "tornado" is believed to originate from the Spanish word "tronada" meaning "thunderstorm," possibly with influence from "tornar" meaning "to turn."
=It originated in America.=
There were no tornadoes in Chicago in 2009.
Yes. The word 'tornado' is originally Spanish.
The word tornado has three syllables.
Tornado.
The first documented use of the word "tornado" was in 1556.
The vocabulary word that describes a tornado is "whirlwind" or "twister."
The first known use of the word "tornado" was in 1556.
The word "tornado" is believed to have originated from the Spanish word "tornar," meaning "to turn" or "to twist." This was then adapted into "tornada" and eventually evolved into "tornado" in English.
It is Early Germanic/Anglo-Saxon. The modern German words for 'Thank you' are ' Danke(Thanks) , Dankeschon( Thank you very much ) , Vielendank (Many thanks). The modern Dutch word is 'Gedank(Thanks). The 'you' is a modern form of 'thee' or 'thy'. A Shakespearean thanks would be said as ' I thank thee'. Compare to the Latin origins of French 'Merci' , and Italian 'Gracie'.
Yes, the word "bolshy" does originate from the "bolsheviks".